# Rust-Postgres A native PostgreSQL driver for Rust. [Documentation](https://sfackler.github.io/rust-postgres/doc/v0.11.1/postgres) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/sfackler/rust-postgres.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/sfackler/rust-postgres) [![Latest Version](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/postgres.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/postgres) You can integrate Rust-Postgres into your project through the [releases on crates.io](https://crates.io/crates/postgres): ```toml # Cargo.toml [dependencies] postgres = "0.11" ``` ## Overview Rust-Postgres is a pure-Rust frontend for the popular PostgreSQL database. ```rust extern crate postgres; use postgres::{Connection, SslMode}; struct Person { id: i32, name: String, data: Option> } fn main() { let conn = Connection::connect("postgres://postgres@localhost", SslMode::None) .unwrap(); conn.execute("CREATE TABLE person ( id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY, name VARCHAR NOT NULL, data BYTEA )", &[]).unwrap(); let me = Person { id: 0, name: "Steven".to_string(), data: None }; conn.execute("INSERT INTO person (name, data) VALUES ($1, $2)", &[&me.name, &me.data]).unwrap(); for row in &conn.query("SELECT id, name, data FROM person", &[]).unwrap() { let person = Person { id: row.get(0), name: row.get(1), data: row.get(2) }; println!("Found person {}", person.name); } } ``` ## Requirements * **Rust** - Rust-Postgres is developed against the 1.5 release of Rust available on http://www.rust-lang.org. It should also compile against more recent releases. * **PostgreSQL 7.4 or later** - Rust-Postgres speaks version 3 of the PostgreSQL protocol, which corresponds to versions 7.4 and later. If your version of Postgres was compiled in the last decade, you should be okay. ## Usage ### Connecting Connect to a Postgres server using the standard URI format: ```rust let conn = try!(Connection::connect("postgres://user:pass@host:port/database?arg1=val1&arg2=val2", SslMode::None)); ``` `pass` may be omitted if not needed. `port` defaults to `5432` and `database` defaults to the value of `user` if not specified. The driver supports `trust`, `password`, and `md5` authentication. Unix domain sockets can be used as well by activating the `unix_socket` feature. The `host` portion of the URI should be set to the absolute path to the directory containing the socket file. Since `/` is a reserved character in URLs, the path should be URL encoded. If Postgres stored its socket files in `/run/postgres`, the connection would then look like: ```rust let conn = try!(Connection::connect("postgres://postgres@%2Frun%2Fpostgres", SslMode::None)); ``` Paths which contain non-UTF8 characters can be handled in a different manner; see the documentation for details. ### Querying SQL statements can be executed with the `query` and `execute` methods. Both methods take a query string as well as a slice of parameters to bind to the query. The `i`th query parameter is specified in the query string by `$i`. Note that query parameters are 1-indexed rather than the more common 0-indexing. `execute` returns the number of rows affected by the query (or 0 if not applicable): ```rust let updates = try!(conn.execute("UPDATE foo SET bar = $1 WHERE baz = $2", &[&1i32, &"biz"])); println!("{} rows were updated", updates); ``` `query` returns an iterable object holding the rows returned from the database. The fields in a row can be accessed either by their indices or their column names, though access by index is more efficient. Unlike statement parameters, result columns are zero-indexed. ```rust for row in &try!(conn.query("SELECT bar, baz FROM foo WHERE buz = $1", &[&1i32])) { let bar: i32 = row.get(0); let baz: String = row.get("baz"); println!("bar: {}, baz: {}", bar, baz); } ``` ### Statement Preparation If the same statement will be executed repeatedly (possibly with different parameters), explicitly preparing it can improve performance: ```rust let stmt = try!(conn.prepare("UPDATE foo SET bar = $1 WHERE baz = $2")); for (bar, baz) in updates { try!(stmt.execute(&[bar, baz])); } ``` ### Transactions The `transaction` method will start a new transaction. It returns a `Transaction` object which has the functionality of a `Connection` as well as methods to control the result of the transaction: ```rust let trans = try!(conn.transaction()); try!(trans.execute(...)); let stmt = try!(trans.prepare(...)); // ... try!(trans.commit()); ``` The transaction will be active until the `Transaction` object falls out of scope. A transaction will roll back by default. Nested transactions are supported via savepoints. ### Type Correspondence Rust-Postgres enforces a strict correspondence between Rust types and Postgres types. The driver currently supports the following conversions:
Rust Type Postgres Type
bool BOOL
i8 "char"
i16 SMALLINT, SMALLSERIAL
i32 INT, SERIAL
u32 OID
i64 BIGINT, BIGSERIAL
f32 REAL
f64 DOUBLE PRECISION
str/String VARCHAR, CHAR(n), TEXT, CITEXT
[u8]/Vec<u8> BYTEA
serialize::json::Json and serde_json::Value (optional) JSON, JSONB
time::Timespec and chrono::NaiveDateTime (optional) TIMESTAMP
time::Timespec, chrono::DateTime<UTC>, chrono::DateTime<Local>, and chrono::DateTime<FixedOffset> (optional) TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
chrono::NaiveDate (optional) DATE
chrono::NaiveTime (optional) TIME
uuid::Uuid (optional) UUID
bit_vec::BitVec (optional) BIT, VARBIT
HashMap<String, Option<String>> HSTORE
More conversions can be defined by implementing the `ToSql` and `FromSql` traits. Support for array types is located in the [postgres-array](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-postgres-array) crate. Support for range types is located in the [postgres-range](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-postgres-range) crate. Support for the large object API is located in the [postgres-large-object](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-postgres-large-object) crate. ## Optional features ### Unix socket connections Support for connections through Unix domain sockets is provided optionally by the `unix_socket` feature. It is only available on "unixy" platforms such as OSX, BSD and Linux. ### UUID type [UUID](http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.4/static/datatype-uuid.html) support is provided optionally by the `uuid` feature, which adds `ToSql` and `FromSql` implementations for `uuid`'s `Uuid` type. ### JSON/JSONB types [JSON and JSONB](http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.4/static/datatype-json.html) support is provided optionally by the `rustc-serialize` feature, which adds `ToSql` and `FromSql` implementations for `rustc-serialize`'s `Json` type, and the `serde_json` feature, which adds implementations for `serde_json`'s `Value` type. ### TIMESTAMP/TIMESTAMPTZ/DATE/TIME types [Date and Time](http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/datatype-datetime.html) support is provided optionally by the `time` feature, which adds `ToSql` and `FromSql` implementations for `time`'s `Timespec` type, or the `chrono` feature, which adds `ToSql` and `FromSql` implementations for `chrono`'s `DateTime`, `NaiveDateTime`, `NaiveDate` and `NaiveTime` types. ### BIT/VARBIT types [BIT and VARBIT](http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.4/static/datatype-bit.html) support is provided optionally by the `bit-vec` feature, which adds `ToSql` and `FromSql` implementations for `bit-vec`'s `BitVec` type.